Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 limits options for Turner's state funeral

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2020 07:05 PM
  • COVID-19 limits options for Turner's state funeral

Planning for a state funeral for former prime minister John Turner is proceeding in the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic, as his family and the government determine how to honour his public life while public events are restricted.

Turner died last Friday at 91. Typically, a former prime minister would be honoured with a public observance of the highest dignity and pomp. But the prospect of spreading COVID-19 will curtail the possibilities for Turner, as it has for many others who have died during the pandemic.

The Turner family's spokesman Marc Kealey said Tuesday the family is still discussing with government officials the date of the funeral and how many people will attend in person.

Canadian Heritage spokeswoman Amelie Desmarais said all decisions regarding funeral arrangements will be made in accordance with the family’s wishes and following advice from public health authorities.

She said Canadians can send their condolences to the family by signing an online book of condolences or by sending their thoughts privately.

"That’s just a fact of life,” said Donald Wright, an expert in Canadian political history at the University of New Brunswick. "Whatever rules are put in place by public heath (officials) will have to be followed by the organizers of Mr. Turner's funeral."

He said state funerals are important because they allow people to mark someone’s remarkable life, celebrate their accomplishments and publicly grieve as Canadians.

"Maybe there'll a virtual (event) where Canadians can watch it either online, or maybe it will be televised — they can watch it on television," Wright said.

State funerals have often included public processions in the streets of Ottawa and periods of lying in state, usually in Parliament, to give an opportunity for Canadians to pay final respects.

Organizers also usually offer public books in locations across the country so people can sign and offer comments, and those books are often deposited with Library and Archives Canada, Wright said.

The last state funeral for a Canadian prime minister was for Pierre Trudeau in 2000.

Wright said that the surprising thing about Pierre Elliott Trudeau’s state funeral is that was a spontaneous moment of national grief.

"The countless Canadians going to Ottawa. The train that carried his body from Ottawa to Montreal for the funeral and people lining up along the railway, that was spontaneous — that wasn't organized by the state," said Wright.

People lined up for hours outside Parliament's Centre Block for a moment with Trudeau's casket and buried the Centennial Flame in flowers.

"It really was a response to this need to grieve together."

Justin Trudeau's televised eulogy for his father at Montreal's Notre-Dame Basilica was a signal moment in the current prime minister's emergence as a national figure.

State funerals are rare. According to the federal government, only 31 state funerals have been held in Canada since Confederation in 1867, including 12 for prime ministers, seven for governors general and eight for cabinet ministers.

Three other members of Parliament have also been given state funerals: the assassinated Thomas D'Arcy McGee in 1868 and, more recently, NDP leader Jack Layton and former finance minister Jim Flaherty.

The government announced a half-masting of the national flags on the Peace Tower and all federal buildings and establishments in Canada to honour Turner's memory. Flags will be at half-mast until the sunset on the day of his funeral.

MORE National ARTICLES

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska
A moderate earthquake has occurred off northwest Vancouver Island but emergency officials in British Columbia say it has not produced a tsunami.

No damage from quakes in B.C., Alaska

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation
A young woman who made headlines with a toss of a chair from a 45th-storey Toronto balcony was fined $2,000 on Tuesday, with the judge saying it was lucky no one was hurt and that Marcella Zoia had been shamed publicly.

'Chair Girl' fined $2K, given probation

Ex-Quebec deputy premier tries to get charges stayed

Ex-Quebec deputy premier tries to get charges stayed
Former Quebec deputy premier Nathalie Normandeau and her co-accused are asking a court for a stay of procedures on corruption-related charges.

Ex-Quebec deputy premier tries to get charges stayed

Glacier bus crash survivor calls for seatbelts

Glacier bus crash survivor calls for seatbelts
The boyfriend of a woman killed when the sightseeing bus the couple was on rolled in the Rocky Mountains believes she would still be alive had passengers been wearing seatbelts.

Glacier bus crash survivor calls for seatbelts

What's in new COVID-19 bill passed by MPs?

What's in new COVID-19 bill passed by MPs?
Though the politics of Parliament Tuesday were largely focused on a controversy around how the Liberals handled a contract for a student grant program, MPs also passed a new piece of legislation.

What's in new COVID-19 bill passed by MPs?

RCMP probing hoax call to Lynn Valley care home

RCMP probing hoax call to Lynn Valley care home
A long-term care home in North Vancouver that was the site of Canada's first COVID-19 death says it received a hoax call as the outbreak began that created "needless fear" and compromised health and safety.

RCMP probing hoax call to Lynn Valley care home